He Supported His Mother For Years Despite Her Addiction, Then One Accusation Changed Everything

There’s a specific kind of exhaustion that comes from loving someone who constantly destroys themselves.

One man recently shared the moment he finally cut his mother off financially after decades of emotional chaos, addiction, manipulation, and heartbreak. But despite feeling justified in his decision, one small detail continues to haunt him: the last thing she asked him for was food.

Not money. Not rent.

Food.

And even now, months later, he still wonders if ignoring that request made him cruel.

The situation struck a nerve online because it touched on something many adult children of addicts understand deeply, the impossible balance between compassion and survival.

Here’s how the relationship finally broke apart.

'AITAH for not caring if my mom is hungry?'

AITA for cutting my mom off financially after she accused me of lying? I’m a 42-year-old man married to my husband (40M).

We’re both successful and together make a little over $1 million a year. My mom has struggled with crack addiction for most of my life.

Despite that, we still had a fairly close relationship and talked almost every day.

For years I financially supported her. I paid the rent and security deposit for her apartment, paid her phone bill, and even added her as an authorized user on our...

A few months ago she randomly texted me saying I was “dirtying her name” and that I deeply hurt her.

I had no clue what she was talking about, so I tried calling her several times and she sent me straight to voicemail.

In one of her voicemails she mentioned that this was supposedly why my sister was acting weird at my wedding.

So I reached out to my siblings in a group chat asking what exactly I was accused of lying about.

Apparently my mom was telling everyone that I lied when I said she told one of my sisters “f__k her and f__k your wedding, I’m not coming.” My mom and...

The problem is… I had screenshots of her literally saying exactly that. I sent the screenshots to the group chat, and my mom responded with, “Oh, I don’t remember saying...

At that point I snapped and told her that until I got an apology, “the bank is closed.”

Later that night she called me sounding either drunk or high and asked me to DoorDash her food because she was hungry.

I told her I was at work and I’d see what I could do, but I never sent the food and honestly I never contacted her again after that because...

Something important for context: when I was 16, my mother legally “divorced” me as her child. So there’s a lot of history there.

I constantly think about that phone call asking for food and feel guilty about it.

Part of me feels justified for finally setting boundaries after years of emotional and financial exhaustion, but another part of me feels horrible because she was asking for something basic...

Years of Financial Support Became Normal

The man, 42, explained that he and his husband are both highly successful and together earn over one million dollars annually. Despite his mother’s long history with crack addiction, he said they still maintained a relatively close relationship for years.

They talked almost every day.

And financially, he carried a huge amount of responsibility for her life.

He paid the rent and security deposit for her apartment. He covered her phone bill. He even added her as an authorized user on one of his American Express accounts with a spending limit.

Reading through the story, it became obvious this wasn’t just occasional help during hard times. He had essentially become one of the main support systems keeping his mother financially afloat.

And then one random text message changed everything.

One Accusation Triggered the Collapse

A few months ago, his mother suddenly texted him accusing him of “dirtying her name” and deeply hurting her.

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The problem was he had absolutely no idea what she meant.

When he tried calling her repeatedly, she sent him straight to voicemail. Eventually, one of those voicemails hinted that the issue had something to do with tension at his wedding involving one of his sisters.

So he reached out to his siblings in a group chat to figure out what was going on.

That’s when he discovered his mother had apparently been telling family members that he lied about something she said regarding his wedding.

Specifically, he had previously claimed that she told one of his sisters, “F__k her and f__k your wedding, I’m not coming.”

According to his mother, that conversation never happened.

Except it did.

The man still had screenshots.

And when he posted the screenshots into the family group chat, proving the messages were real, his mother reportedly changed tactics instantly and simply replied, “Oh, I don’t remember saying that.”

That was apparently the breaking point.

After years of emotional strain, financial support, and addiction-fueled chaos, something about being publicly accused of lying when he had proof pushed him over the edge.

He told her that until she apologized, “the bank is closed.”

And for the first time in years, he actually meant it.

The Phone Call He Can’t Stop Thinking About

Later that same night, his mother called him sounding either drunk or high and asked if he could DoorDash her food because she was hungry.

He told her he was at work and would “see what he could do.”

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But he never ordered the food.

And after that call, he stopped contacting her entirely.

That detail is what continues to eat at him emotionally. Because even though he knows he reached a limit, part of him still feels guilty about refusing a basic need like food.

But then came the final piece of context that completely changed the emotional weight of the story.

When he was sixteen years old, his mother legally “divorced” him as her child.

That one sentence explained a lot.

Because suddenly this no longer sounded like a son cruelly abandoning a struggling parent. It sounded like someone who had spent decades trying to earn love from a person who emotionally abandoned him long ago.

Addiction Changes the Rules of Normal Relationships

A huge number of commenters focused on one important reality: addiction destroys boundaries.

Many people pointed out that financially supporting an active addict often becomes less about helping and more about enabling.

Others gently explained that children of addicts frequently develop deep guilt around setting limits because they’ve spent years feeling responsible for their parent’s survival.

And honestly, the emotional contradiction here is brutal.

On one hand, food is a basic human need. Ignoring someone asking for help naturally feels awful.

On the other hand, people who grow up around addiction learn that every interaction becomes emotionally loaded. A simple request for food can also become a doorway back into cycles of manipulation, guilt, dependency, and chaos.

Several commenters also pointed out something important: if she truly had no food, there were other resources available. Food banks, shelters, relatives, community programs. She also could have apologized.

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Instead, the relationship stayed frozen in the same painful dynamic it had apparently lived in for years, pride, blame, denial, and emotional exhaustion.

Check out how the community responded:

Many described him as someone carrying years of unresolved trauma from growing up with an addicted parent.

MaiasaidAmelia − You’ve been enabling her and contributing to her addiction. She has been glad to manipulate you for your whole life.

If anything that money should have been spent on rehab. Never give her a penny again. I would suggest therapy on your end to help you break trauma bonds.

Simone617 − id turn my phone off and have a staycation,

JudgeJoan − It’s time to distance yourself even more. This isn’t healthy. Stop bankrolling your mom’s addictions.

Tell her the last thing you will pay for her will be rehab (if you’re willing to give money this is how to do it).

I’m sorry. Parents are supposed to be better than this and you deserve better. Sincerely the mom of a gay son. 💕

Several people encouraged therapy, especially because children of addicts often internalize responsibility for problems they never created.

Truebeliever-14 − If your mom was really that desperate for food she would have apologized even if she didn’t mean it.

You know having lived with her how manipulative d__g addicts are, stop beating yourself up.

Glittering-Set-2510 − You buried the lead there with the emancipation at 16. You need to use this fact in all conversations. NO MORE MONEY. And Doordash is not a basic....

Clean_Reason7121 − As the child of an addict myself, please let me reassure you. Sleep soundly at night, like a baby. You have nothing to feel guilty over, at all.

She made her bed years ago, now she can lie in it. Side note: one of my parents is a gambling addict. A tad different from your situation but plenty...

Best of luck to you and your husband! 🍀

Others bluntly stated that continuing to fund an active addiction was hurting both of them, not helping.

Imaginary-Glove1329 − Stop setting yourself on fire keep her warm. It comes a time that you need to let her be the adult.

Beautiful_Arm8364 − I guess she'd better apologize then. Sounds like she's chosen to make you an enemy, and she can't be surprised that choice comes with consequences. Stay strong.

Daphneandava − There are food banks everywhere is she was really hungry. She just wants to get back in and have control to continue to live off your charity.

tiggergirluk76 − YTA for financially supporting her habit. What was your motivation there?

Sometimes guilt survives long after love has turned into exhaustion.

This man clearly cared deeply about his mother. You do not financially support someone for years, despite addiction and emotional damage, unless part of you still hopes things can eventually become normal.

But there comes a point where helping stops being compassionate and starts destroying the person doing the helping.

And maybe that’s the hardest truth in stories like this.

Walking away from someone you love can feel cruel, even when staying hurts you more.

So what do you think, was this necessary boundary-setting after years of manipulation, or should family support never have limits when basic needs like food are involved?

 

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